Stephen H. Perron v. J.P. Morgan Chase Bank, N.A.

845 F.3d 852, 2017 WL 104466, 2017 U.S. App. LEXIS 496
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedJanuary 11, 2017
Docket15-2206
StatusPublished
Cited by31 cases

This text of 845 F.3d 852 (Stephen H. Perron v. J.P. Morgan Chase Bank, N.A.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stephen H. Perron v. J.P. Morgan Chase Bank, N.A., 845 F.3d 852, 2017 WL 104466, 2017 U.S. App. LEXIS 496 (7th Cir. 2017).

Opinion

SYKES, Circuit Judge.

Stephen Perron and Christine Jackson owned their home in Indianapolis subject to a note and mortgage serviced by J.P. Morgan Chase Bank. In 2012 the couple divorced, ending their 25-year marriage. They blame Chase for contributing to the collapse of their marriage by failing to comply with its obligations under the Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act (“RES-PA”), 12 U.S.C. §§ 2601-2617.

RE SPA requires mortgage servicers to correct account errors and disclose account information when a borrower sends a written request for information. In 2011 Per-ron and Jackson sent two such letters accusing Chase of erroneously paying the wrong homeowner’s insurer using $1,422 from their escrow account. The mistake was their own fault; they had switched insurers without telling Chase. When the bank learned of the change, it promptly paid the new insurer and informed the couple that their old insurer would send a refund check. The bank also told them to forward the refund check in order to replenish the depleted escrow.

*854 They didn’t. When the refund came, they pocketed the money instead. So the bank adjusted their monthly mortgage payment to make up the shortfall. When the couple refused to pay the higher amount, the mortgage went into default. Instead of curing, they sent Chase two letters requesting information under RES-PA and demanding that the bank reimburse their escrow. In response Chase sent a complete account history, including a detailed escrow statement.

The couple then sued Chase claiming that its response was inadequate under RESPA and caused more than $300,000 in damages — including the loss of their marriage. They tacked on a claim for breach of the implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing. The district judge entered summary judgment for Chase.

We affirm. Chase’s response almost perfectly complied with its RE SPA duties. To the extent that any requested information was missing, Perron and Jackson suffered no actual damages and thus have no viable claim. Nor did Chase breach the duty of good faith and fair dealing, assuming that Indiana would recognize the implied covenant in this context.

I. Background

Perron and Jackson, a married couple, owned their home in Indianapolis subject to a 2003 note and mortgage. Chase became their loan servicer in 2005. Perron is a retired criminal investigator for the IRS; Jackson is an attorney who represents consumers fighting loan servicers. The dispute arises out of complications with the couple’s mortgage. The story begins in 2009 with their failure to give Chase notice when they changed homeowner’s insurers.

Like many mortgage servicers, Chase had the responsibility of paying the couple’s home-insurance premiums from their escrow account. In March 2009 Perron and Jackson changed their home-insurance provider from Allstate to Homesite Insurance without telling Chase. By that time, however, the bank had already paid Allstate’s $1,422 premium for that year. When the bank independently learned of the change, it promptly paid Homesite’s premium from the escrow account. Chase then sent the couple a letter explaining the situation and instructing them to remit the refund check from Allstate to replenish their escrow.

Perron and Jackson received a refund check from Allstate but ignored Chase’s instructions and deposited the money into a non-Chase account. This created an estimated escrow shortfall of $802.28 for the upcoming year. 1 To make up the deficiency, Chase notified the couple that their monthly mortgage payment would rise from $1,432.15 to $1,499.01 — an increase of $66.86 per month. The couple ignored this as well. From February 2010 to November 2010, they paid Chase only $1,469.20 each month. (The amount is puzzling. It’s lower than the 2010 required monthly payment yet higher than the 2009 monthly payments. Perron and Jackson haven’t explained why they paid this sum.)

In November 2010 Perron and Jackson reviewed their account information and decided that Chase had miscalculated their 2010 mortgage payments because of the “erroneous” escrow payment to Allstate in 2009 — apparently forgetting that they had received and pocketed the refund check from Allstate despite Chase’s instructions. *855 To correct this “error,” they called Chase and said they would remit $1,399.23 for their December 2010 mortgage payment— about $100 less than the required payment.

Chase received the partial payment and held it “in suspense” — that is, the bank held the payment without crediting it toward the couple’s payment for that month. This put the mortgage into default, which in turn automatically withdrew the couple from Chase’s electronic-payment system. Perron and Jackson apparently didn’t no-. tice the default until their January 2011 payment was also past due.

As an aside, in late December 2010 and in the ordinary course, Chase sent the couple an escrow disclosure statement — an accounting of the money flowing into and out of their escrow and a calculation of any shortfall or surplus. The disclosure statement was accompanied by an escrow refund of $250.05. The refund was owed because the couple’s property-tax liability was $418.02 less than estimated. This meant that even though the couple underpaid their mortgage by about $30 each month from February through November 2010, there was no actual shortfall in their escrow account for that year.

Back to the story of the default. In January 2011 Chase sent the couple a default notice and told them to remit a payment of $2,998.02 — the full monthly payments for December 2010 and January 2011 plus a late fee. The notice also stated that the December 2010 partial payment currently held in suspense would be credited toward the amount needed to cure. Accordingly, the amount needed to bring the mortgage current was $1,659.72.

Instead of curing, the couple sent Chase a letter dated January 10, 2011, and labeled a “qualified written request” under RE SPA. The letter accused Chase of improperly paying the $1,422 from their escrow in 2009. It also demanded that Chase return the money, undo the “improper” default, send account information, and identify the “entity” that received the $1,422 escrow payment. The letter also demanded information about the December 2010 partial payment that was held in suspense. Chase received the letter on January 25.

The bank responded by letter dated February 25 and included two attachments: a detailed accounting of the loan’s payment history and an escrow analysis from 2007 through 2010. The letter stated that “[a]ny information or document requested but not included with this package is unavailable or considered proprietary[ ] and will not be provided.” In the meantime, the deadline for the couple’s February mortgage payment came and went; they did not pay.

Dissatisfied with Chase’s response, the couple sent Chase a second letter dated April 27, also labeled a “qualified written request” under RE SPA. This letter accused Chase of failing to adequately respond to the first inquiry and reiterated many of the demands they had made in the earlier letter. It also demanded payment of $330,000 in damages.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
845 F.3d 852, 2017 WL 104466, 2017 U.S. App. LEXIS 496, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stephen-h-perron-v-jp-morgan-chase-bank-na-ca7-2017.